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Revision as of 14:14, 25 April 2014
File:American Concrete Institute Logo with name and motto.png | |
Founded | 1904 |
---|---|
Type | Standards Development Organization |
Focus | Concrete, Civil engineering, Structural engineering, standards organization, construction. |
Location | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Method | Industry standards, Conferences, Publications, Certifications, Education. |
Website | http://www.concrete.org/ |
The American Concrete Institute (ACI) is a non-profit technical society and standard developing organization (SDO). ACI was founded in 1904 and its headquarters are currently located in Farmington Hills, Michigan, USA.[1] ACI's mission is "ACI develops and disseminates consensus-based knowledge on concrete and its uses."[2]
ACI History
A lack of standards for making concrete blocks resulted in a negative perception of concrete for construction. An editorial by Charles C. Brown in the September 1904 issue of Municipal Engineering discussed the idea of forming an organization to bring order and standard practices to the industry.[3] In 1905 the National Association of Cement Users was formally organized and adopted a constitution and bylaws. Richard Humphrey was elected as the first President of the association. The first committees were appointed at the 1905 convention in Indianapolis and offered preliminary reports on a number of subject areas. The first complete committee reports were offered at the 1907 convention. The association's first official headquarters was established in 1908 at Richard Humphrey's office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Clerical and editorial help was brought on to more effectively organize conventions and publish proceedings of the institute. The "Standard Building Regulations for the Use of Reinforced Concrete" was adopted at the 1910 convention and became the association's first reinforced concrete building code. By 1912 the association had adopted 14 standards. At the December 1912 convention the association approved publication of a monthly journal of proceedings. In July of 1913 the Board of Direction of NACU decided to change its name to the American Concrete Institute. The new name was deemed to be more descriptive of the work being conducted within the institute.[4]
ACI 318
ACI 318 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete provides minimum requirements[which are? clarification needed] for the design and construction of structural concrete members of any structure erected under the requirements of a general building code that incorporates it.[5] It is issued and maintained by the American Concrete Institute.[6]
Concrete International
Concrete International is a monthly magazine published by the American Concrete Institute. Searchable abstracts of articles are available via the magazine's web page. [7]
Awards
The Wason Medal for Most Meritorious Paper has been awarded each year since 1917 to the author or authors of a paper published by ACI.[8] Notable recipients include:
- 1917: Abraham Burton Cohen
- 1922: Harold M. Westergaard
- 1933: Charles S. Whitney
- 1935: Hardy Cross
- 1950: Chester P. Siess, George E. Beggs and Nathan M. Newmark
- 1953: Charles S. Whitney, Boyd Anderson and Mario Salvadori
- 1971: Fazlur Khan and Mark Fintel
References
- ^ ACI:A Century of Progress
- ^ ACI Strategic Plan, 2013, American Concrete Institute | url=http://www.concrete.org/AboutACI/StrategicPlan.aspx
- ^ Charles C. Brown, Municipal Engineering, 1904
- ^ ACI: A Century of Progress, American Concrete Institute, 2003, pp 3-10 | url=http://www.concrete.org/members/ACI_History_Book.pdf
- ^ Furlong, Richard W. "Design Rules for Steel- Concrete Composite Columns: 1971 to 2011". Concrete International. American Concrete Institute. Retrieved 8 Aug 2012. (subscription required)
- ^ Building Code "ACI 318-11 Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete and Commentary". American Concrete Institute. Retrieved 8 Aug 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Check|url=
value (help) - ^ "Concrete International Website". American Concrete Institute.
- ^ "Wason Medal for Most Meritorious Paper". American Concrete Institute. Retrieved 25 November 2009.